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double standard
[ duhb-uhl stan-derd ]
noun
- any code or set of principles containing different provisions for one group of people than for another, especially an unwritten code of sexual behavior permitting men more freedom than women. Compare single standard ( def 1 ).
- Economics. bimetallism.
double standard
noun
- a set of principles that allows greater freedom to one person or group than to another
yĐÄvlog History and Origins
Origin of double standard1
Idioms and Phrases
A set of principles establishing different provisions for one group than another; also, specifically, allowing men more sexual freedom than women. For example, She complained that her father had a double standardâher brothers were allowed to date, but she was not, even though she was older . [Mid-1900s]Example Sentences
When you make jokes about gender double standards, you say that itâs never to bash men, itâs to empower women.
The controversy around it feeds into a wider dialogue about women's rights and double standards when it comes to dress codes, she adds.
In Spears' memoir, "The Woman in Me," she wrote that she noticed a double standard in the media while dating Justin Timberlake at 18.
The League and its backers have for months argued that Sanchezâs case has laid bare a double standard in the way that command staff and rank-and-file officers are treated, which has hurt morale.
âThe filing of this bill is to point out the double standards in legislation,â said Blackmon.
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More About Double Standard
What does double standard mean?
Ideally, we should all be judged according to the same criteria. But when someone is treated differently than someone else in the same situation, especially when women are treated differently than men or men are given more freedom than women, we call that a double standard.
How do you pronounce double standard?
[ duhb-uhl stan-derd ]Where does double standard come from?
The expression double standard originally referred to 18th- and 19th-century economic policies of bimetallism. Bimetallism was a monetary system that was based on two metalsâa double standard, in its financial âprescribed valueâ sense, of gold and silver.
The first recorded instance of the idea of a double standard as applying to the realm of morality and ethics was in the late 1800s. By the turn of the 20th century, double standard was used both in dry economic debates and spicier discussions of morality. For instance, the opening address by Yaleâs president in 1905 exhorted students to guard against âdouble standards in college and business lifeâ as good Christians.
The question of double standards as referring to different expectations in behavior for men and women emerged in the 1910â20s. One Christian text from the time snappily put it: âWhat was right for Jack was wrong for Jill.â The womenâs suffrage movement picked up on the moral tone of double standards and used it to fight for their rights.
Around the same time, the idea of double standards as applying specifically to different rules for sexual activity for men and women (i.e., a manâs a stud if he has multiple sexual partners, but when women do, theyâre sluts) started gaining wider use. One textbook example, written by a medical doctor in 1915 reads, âthe majority of mankindâwomen includedâbelieves in the justification of the double standard of sex-morality for the two sexes.â The debate about female sexuality in those terms continued in mainstream culture into the 19th and 20th centuries.
By 1930, the expression double standard was used in just about any context to describe two different sets of rules for the same thing. While double standard isnât a legal term per se, it became increasingly associated with arguing for equal treatment before the court. With the rise of the Civil Rights movement starting in the 1940s, activists frequently complained about the double standards for white and Black people as well as other oppressed minority groups.
The Womenâs Liberation Movement from the 1960s thrust the spotlight back on the sexual double standards for men and womenâand contributed, no doubt, to the prevalence of double standards in the context of sex and gender.
How is double standard used in real life?
Double standard is often used in the plural, double standards, to refer to the many and various unfair rules or expectations that differ between different groups of people.
As noted, double standard is frequently used in the context of sex and gender. When men are forceful in a debate, they may be called assertive while women are called shrill and bossy and told to smile moreâa double standard.
The amount of times Hillary Clinton has been told to "smile more" proves Hank's point. Unbelievable double-standard.
â Clay Schwartzwalter (@ClaytheSchwartz)
Double standards also decry a whole range of other injustices. Many people describe, for instance, the different treatment white and Black people get by law enforcement and in the justice system as a double standard. Others describe, when it comes to religious liberties, the different treatment Christians and Muslims get in Western society as a double standard. Yet others think policies like affirmative action are a double standard, showing historically marginalized groups favoritism.
Double standards donât just refer to big-picture social issues, though. Any unequal application of the rules qualifies, including less consequential ones. A kid complaining their older sibling gets to stay up later than them might whine that itâs a double standard, for example.
More examples of double standard:
âProgressives say you must bake a cake for a gay wedding, but you donât have to serve Sarah Sanders when she comes to eat in your restaurant. If the Left didnât have double standards, they would have no standards at all.â
âJohn Veritas, Rutland Herald, June, 2018
Note
This content is not meant to be a formal definition of this term. Rather, it is an informal summary that seeks to provide supplemental information and context important to know or keep in mind about the termâs history, meaning, and usage.
Definitions and idiom definitions from Dictionary.com Unabridged, based on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2023
Idioms from The American HeritageŸ Idioms Dictionary copyright © 2002, 2001, 1995 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company.
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